Credit Card Payoff Calculator

Credit Card Payoff Calculator

Find out how long it will take to pay off your credit card debt and how much interest you'll pay. Set a payoff deadline instead and see exactly what monthly payment it takes to get there. Enter your balance and APR to get started.

Credit Card Payoff Calculator

Two modes: find your payoff date, or find the payment you need to hit a target date

Card Details
Your Monthly Payment
Est. monthly interest charge at this APR
Enter balance and rate above
Card Details
Payoff Goal

Enter your card balance and APR to see your payoff timeline and total interest cost.

Credit Card Payoff Calculator - Content

How a Credit Card Payoff Calculator Works

A credit card payoff calculator shows you exactly how long it will take to eliminate your credit card balance at your current monthly payment, and how much total interest you'll pay to get there. It works in two directions: enter your balance, APR, and monthly payment to find your payoff date, or enter a target payoff date to find the exact monthly payment you need.

The math behind it is straightforward amortization. Each month, your payment covers the interest that accrued on the balance first. Whatever is left chips away at the principal. Next month's interest charge is calculated on the new (slightly lower) balance. Repeat until zero. The calculator runs this cycle for every month of your payoff plan and reports the totals.

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Why minimum payments are a trap. On a $5,000 balance at 21.52% APR, a 2% minimum payment starts at $100/month. At that rate, the payoff timeline stretches past 25 years and total interest exceeds $7,000, which exceeds the original balance. Credit card issuers are required by law to show this on your statement (CARD Act, 2009), but most people skip past it. The calculator above makes the true cost visible in seconds.

How to Use This Credit Card Debt Calculator

Tab 1: How Long to Pay Off?

Enter your current balance, your card's APR (found on your statement or in your online account), and the monthly payment you're making or planning to make. The calculator shows your payoff date, total interest cost, and the percentage of your total payments that goes to interest rather than debt reduction. A live warning fires if your payment is too low to cover the monthly interest, the most common mistake people make.

Tab 2: How Much to Pay Monthly?

Enter your balance and APR, then set your target payoff timeline in months. The calculator uses the standard amortization formula to tell you the exact fixed monthly payment required to clear the balance by that date. This is the mode to use when you have a goal ("I want this gone in 18 months") and need to reverse-engineer the payment.

The $50/Month Comparison

After Tab 1 calculates, a green panel appears showing how much sooner you'd pay off the debt and how much interest you'd save by adding just $50 more per month. On high-APR balances, this number is often startlingly large. Adding $50/month to a $5,000 balance at 21.52% APR with a $150 payment saves about 14 months and roughly $900 in interest.

How Credit Card Interest Is Actually Calculated

Credit card interest math goes deeper than a simple APR ÷ 12. Understanding the actual method helps you minimize what you pay.

Daily Periodic Rate and Average Daily Balance

Most credit card issuers calculate interest using your average daily balance. They divide your APR by 365 to get the Daily Periodic Rate (DPR), then multiply it by your average daily balance across the billing period, then multiply by the number of days in the billing cycle.

Monthly interest = DPR × Average Daily Balance × Days in cycle

This means payments made earlier in the billing cycle reduce the average daily balance more than payments made on the due date. Paying twice a month, or as soon as your paycheck clears, saves a small but real amount compared to waiting until the due date.

The Grace Period

If you pay your full statement balance every month by the due date, credit cards cannot charge interest on new purchases during the next billing cycle. This is the grace period, typically 21 to 25 days. Carry any balance forward and the grace period disappears, meaning new purchases start accruing interest from day one.

The True Cost of Credit Card Debt at 2026 Rates

With the national average APR at 21.52% for accounts accruing interest (Federal Reserve G.19, Q1 2026), carrying a credit card balance is one of the most expensive forms of borrowing available to consumers. Here's what different balances cost in interest when paid at common payment levels:

BalanceAPRMonthly PaymentMonths to Pay OffTotal Interest
$2,00021.52%$50 (min.)67 months$1,323
$2,00021.52%$10024 months$376
$5,00021.52%$10083 months$3,281
$5,00021.52%$20030 months$1,101
$10,00021.52%$20083 months$6,562
$10,00021.52%$40030 months$2,202
$15,00021.52%$30096 months$13,748
$15,00021.52%$60030 months$3,356

* All figures calculated using standard monthly amortization at 21.52% APR (Fed G.19, Q1 2026). No new purchases assumed. Use the calculator above for your specific balance and rate.

How to Pay Off Credit Card Debt Faster

Pay More Than the Minimum, Every Month

The minimum payment is designed to keep you in debt as long as possible. It typically runs 1% to 2% of your balance, just barely above the monthly interest charge. Doubling your minimum payment often cuts your payoff time by more than half and reduces total interest by 60% or more on high-APR balances. Even an extra $25 to $50/month compresses the timeline significantly.

Apply the Debt Avalanche or Snowball

With multiple credit cards, target one card at a time while paying minimums on the rest. The avalanche targets the highest-APR card first to minimize total interest. The snowball targets the smallest balance first to generate quick wins and motivation. Both work far better than spreading extra payments evenly across all cards.

Negotiate a Lower APR

A June 2026 LendingTree survey found that 84% of cardholders who asked for a lower APR received one, with an average reduction of 6.3 percentage points. A six-point reduction on a $5,000 balance at 21.52% APR saves approximately $600 in interest over a 30-month payoff period. Call the number on the back of your card, ask for a rate reduction, and cite your payment history and length of relationship. This costs nothing to try.

Transfer the Balance to a 0% Card

Balance transfer cards in 2026 offer promotional 0% APR periods of 12 to 21 months, with a transfer fee of 3 to 5% of the balance. On a $6,000 balance with a 3% fee ($180), eliminating 18 months of 21.52% interest saves roughly $1,500 net, even after the fee. You must commit to paying off the transferred balance before the promotional period ends; any remaining balance reverts to a standard purchase APR, which is typically 19% to 27%.

Use Windfalls for Lump-Sum Payments

A tax refund, work bonus, or any unexpected cash applied directly to your highest-rate card balance creates an immediate permanent reduction in the balance on which all future interest is calculated. A $2,000 lump sum applied to a $6,000 balance at 21.52% APR reduces the remaining payoff timeline by roughly 14 months at a $200/month payment and saves over $800 in interest.

Balance Transfer vs. Personal Loan: Which Cuts Debt Cost More?

Balance Transfer CardPersonal Loan
Best rate available0% intro for 12–21 months~10–14% for excellent credit (June 2026)
Upfront fee3–5% of transferred balance0–6% origination fee (varies)
What happens after intro?Resets to go-to APR (19–27%)Fixed rate for full loan term
Credit score neededUsually 680+Usually 680+ for competitive rates
Best forCan pay off balance within promo periodNeed longer structured repayment
RiskRate spike if balance remains after promo endsFixed payments, no surprise rate changes
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Run the full math before transferring. A 3% balance transfer fee on $8,000 is $240 upfront. If you can clear the full balance in 18 months at 0% interest, you save the entire interest cost minus $240. If the balance goes back to 24% APR after the promo ends on $4,000 still owed, the savings disappear quickly. Use the calculator to model both scenarios with your actual numbers.

Frequently Asked Questions

How long will it take to pay off my credit card?
It depends on your balance, APR, and monthly payment. At 21.52% APR (national average, Q1 2026), a $5,000 balance paid at $150/month takes about 42 months and costs roughly $1,300 in interest. At $200/month, the same balance clears in 30 months with $1,101 in interest. At the minimum payment of around $100/month, it stretches to over 83 months with $3,281 in interest. Enter your exact numbers in the calculator above to get your specific payoff date.
What is a credit card interest calculator used for?
A credit card interest calculator shows how much of each payment goes to interest versus principal, the total interest you'll pay over the life of the debt, and how changing your payment affects both. It answers questions like: "If I pay $50 more per month, how much do I save?" or "What would I need to pay to clear this by December?" The tool above handles both of those directions. Credit card issuers are required by the CARD Act to show a similar calculation on every statement, but a standalone calculator lets you model any scenario instantly.
What is the average credit card APR in 2026?
The average APR for credit card accounts accruing interest was 21.52% in Q1 2026, down from 22.30% in Q4 2025, according to the Federal Reserve's G.19 consumer credit report. The average across all credit card accounts (including those paid in full monthly) was 21.00%. New card offers average 23.79% (LendingTree, June 2026). Excellent-credit borrowers typically see offers in the 15 to 19% range. Store cards and subprime cards can run 28 to 36%.
How does credit card interest work?
Credit card issuers divide your APR by 365 to get a daily periodic rate, then apply it to your average daily balance across the billing cycle. This means interest compounds daily, making it more expensive than simple monthly interest. Most cards also eliminate the interest-free grace period the moment you carry any balance, meaning new purchases start accruing interest from day one of the next cycle. Paying your full statement balance each month by the due date is the only way to avoid interest entirely.
Should I do a balance transfer to pay off credit card debt?
A balance transfer makes sense when you have a clear plan to pay off the transferred balance before the promotional period ends. In 2026, 0% intro APR offers run 12 to 21 months with a 3 to 5% transfer fee. On a $5,000 balance at 21.52% APR, a 3% fee ($150) gets you 18 months of 0% interest, saving roughly $1,400 net. The risk: if you still carry a balance when the promo ends and the rate resets to 24%, you could end up paying more interest than you would have on the original card. Use the calculator to model both scenarios before deciding.
What happens if I pay only the minimum on my credit card?
Paying only the minimum is the slowest and most expensive way to eliminate credit card debt. At 21.52% APR, a $5,000 balance with a 2% minimum payment ($100 starting) takes over 83 months to clear and costs more than $3,000 in interest, which equals 60% of the original balance paid back in pure interest charges. The CARD Act requires card issuers to print a minimum payment warning on every statement showing how long payoff takes at the minimum. Most people skip it. The number is almost always alarming.
Can I negotiate a lower credit card interest rate?
Yes, and it works more often than most people expect. A June 2026 LendingTree survey found that 84% of cardholders who asked their issuer for a lower APR received one, with an average reduction of 6.3 percentage points. Call the number on the back of your card and ask to speak with the retention or customer loyalty department. Come prepared with your payment history, how long you've been a customer, and any competitive offers you've received. A six-point reduction on a $6,000 balance saves roughly $700 in interest over a 30-month payoff at $250/month.
How do I pay off credit card debt fast?
The fastest path combines three moves: (1) Stop adding new charges to the card you're paying off. (2) Pay the maximum you can each month, well above the minimum. (3) Apply any lump sums (tax refunds, bonuses, side income) directly to your highest-rate balance. Structural moves that also help: negotiate a lower APR (84% success rate per LendingTree June 2026), transfer the balance to a 0% intro card if you qualify, or consolidate multiple cards into a personal loan at a lower fixed rate. The most important thing is picking a plan and executing it consistently. The difference between $150/month and $250/month on a $6,000 balance at 21.52% APR is 29 months saved and over $2,000 in interest avoided.
2026 Credit Card Rate Facts
Federal Reserve G.19 · Q1 2026 Avg APR (accruing interest) 21.52% Avg APR (all accounts) 21.00% Avg APR (new card offers) 23.79% Prime Rate 6.75% (June 2026) Total US CC debt $1.252 trillion (NY Fed Q1 2026) APR cut success rate 84% (LendingTree June 2026) Avg APR cut when asked 6.3 percentage points
Balance Transfer Guide 2026
Market data · June 2026 0% intro APR term 12–21 months typical Transfer fee 3–5% of balance Credit score needed Usually 680+ Go-to APR after promo 19–27% typical Best for Can pay off within promo window Avoid if Balance will remain after promo ends
Interest Cost Quick Reference
At 21.52% APR · all interest over full payoff $2,000 at $100/mo 24 months · $376 interest $5,000 at $150/mo 42 months · $1,296 interest $5,000 at $200/mo 30 months · $1,101 interest $10,000 at $300/mo 42 months · $2,590 interest $10,000 at $400/mo 30 months · $2,202 interest